CARCOSA [they/them]

Posting on hexbear.net this is the twelfth kind of liberalism.

  • 52 Posts
  • 192 Comments
Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: March 23rd, 2021

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  • Are you open to submitting a mod application either via hexbear direct message or matrix

    Application

    What is your Hexbear username?

    Do you have any preferred pronouns?

    What are your thoughts on capitalism?

    What are your thoughts on imperialism?

    What are your thoughts on trans rights?

    What are your thoughts on racial justice?

    What do think about current and previous protests around the world?

    What are your thoughts on Veganism and Animal Liberation?

    Do you have any experience with other leftist online communities?

    What did those experiences teach you?

    What is your approach to moderation, and how do you work with teams?

    How do you deal with online drama and people who try to start things for the sake of it?

    What current comms would you be interested in moderating?

    Do you have any ideas for community engagement?

    What is your general time availability? (Time zone, amounts, common browsing times, etc)

    Element information

    Element is a messaging app that lets you talk to people over the Matrix protocol.

    To get started, check out this link, where you can choose to either download Element for your platform or, if on a computer, open it in a browser.

    The instructions that follow are for the desktop application and the web application, but the process is similar on all apps:

    Press “Create Account”

    We host our own Matrix server, so if you want you can change matrix.org to chapo.chat.

    This is completely optional; users who sign up with a matrix.org username can still talk to people with chapo.chat username.

    (Note: It is chapo.chat, not hexbear.net. Also, registrations aren’t always open on chapo.chat; if they’re not, just create an account on matrix.org)

    Fill in a username and password

    Hit register, and you’re done!



  • Are you open to submitting a mod application either via hexbear direct message or matrix

    Application

    What is your Hexbear username?

    Do you have any preferred pronouns?

    What are your thoughts on capitalism?

    What are your thoughts on imperialism?

    What are your thoughts on trans rights?

    What are your thoughts on racial justice?

    What do think about current and previous protests around the world?

    What are your thoughts on Veganism and Animal Liberation?

    Do you have any experience with other leftist online communities?

    What did those experiences teach you?

    What is your approach to moderation, and how do you work with teams?

    How do you deal with online drama and people who try to start things for the sake of it?

    What current comms would you be interested in moderating?

    Do you have any ideas for community engagement?

    What is your general time availability? (Time zone, amounts, common browsing times, etc)

    Element information

    Element is a messaging app that lets you talk to people over the Matrix protocol.

    To get started, check out this link, where you can choose to either download Element for your platform or, if on a computer, open it in a browser.

    The instructions that follow are for the desktop application and the web application, but the process is similar on all apps:

    Press “Create Account”

    We host our own Matrix server, so if you want you can change matrix.org to chapo.chat.

    This is completely optional; users who sign up with a matrix.org username can still talk to people with chapo.chat username.

    (Note: It is chapo.chat, not hexbear.net. Also, registrations aren’t always open on chapo.chat; if they’re not, just create an account on matrix.org)

    Fill in a username and password

    Hit register, and you’re done!




  • The margins between the three communities are evolving and will be a conversation between the users and the mods.

    It really does provide the ability to curate what kinds of “tank posts” you’ll see.

    Slop for what the old tanks were like

    Gossip for an informal discussion regarding people with power / notable / tools of power

    Counterprop for a formalized discussion regarding reactionary people no matter how powerful/notable





  • Why Gossip instead of the dunk tank?

    Because there was ample evidence of the dunk tank, as a term, being an abhorrently racist term that killed people, whereas gossip is a tool that has been vital to marginalized communities demonized by the patriarchy over time. The site has recently committed to addressing the issue of misogyny on the site and lemmy at large. The moderators of the gossip community are dedicated to reclaiming Gossip as a means by which a group of marginalized people can commiserate over those that wield the power which oppresses them or are willing tools of it.

    The scholar Silvia Federici, in her Feminist and Marxist interpretation of the Witch Hunts of the early modern period in Europe, analyses how the term gossip was used as a misogynist, oppressive tool against women. Federici recounts that by the sixteenth century in modern England, gossip, a term that had been commonly used during the Middle Ages to indicate a close female friend, turned into a denigrating term signifying idle talk.

    During the Middle Ages, sociality among women prevailed, most activities were performed collectively, and a tight-knit community emerged. In the sixteenth century, with the destruction of the guilds, industrialisation, the emergence of capitalism, and, coincidentally (or not so coincidentally) the violent Witch Hunts, women started to be excluded from society leading to a feminisation of poverty.

    The Witch Hunts demonised most interactions amongst women. Women were surveilled, marginalised and feared. Friendships amongst women became an object of suspicion, denounced, and understood as subversive. Women were portrayed as scolds, too domineering of their husbands, witches, and worse… Gossipers! And thus, the harmless stereotype of women as innate gossipers emerged.

    I use the word harmless sarcastically for many reasons. An obvious one is that a torture instrument was designed with the sole intention of punishing those women involved in gossiping.

    description of torture

    This instrument called the scold’s/witch’s/gossip bridle was an iron muzzle that locked onto the women’s head and mouth, pressing their tongue down to prevent them from speaking.

    Furthermore, the term gossip has been used to not only destroy traditional female practices, collective relations and systems of knowledge but also erode women’s rights and devalue women’s labour. Today, it continues to be used to reinforce the gender binary, infantilise certain actors, and construct certain conversations as worthless.

    Gossip is a tool used by women and other marginalised people to share information that other systems often won’t consider. Gossip keeps our communities together, it keeps us safe, it equips us with important knowledge. The personal is political. Our intimacies are political. To gossip is a subversive act, an anti-capitalist act, and a feminist act. Let’s reclaim this act, get together and gossip! After all, what do we have to lose? We are all witches in their eyes anyway.

    Gossip as a gendered term

    Origin of Gossip

    History of Gossip

    Evolution of Gossip


  • Because there was ample evidence of the dunk tank being an abhorrently racist term that killed people where as gossip is a tool that has been vital to marginilized communities demonized by the patrirarchy over time. The site has recently commited to addressing the issue of misogyny on the site and lemmy at large.

    The scholar Silvia Federici, in her Feminist and Marxist interpretation of the Witch Hunts of the early modern period in Europe, analyses how the term gossip was used as a misogynist, oppressive tool against women. Federici recounts that by the sixteenth century in modern England, gossip, a term that had been commonly used during the Middle Ages to indicate a close female friend, turned into a denigrating term signifying idle talk.

    During the Middle Ages, sociality among women prevailed, most activities were performed collectively, and a tight-knit community emerged. In the sixteenth century, with the destruction of the guilds, industrialisation, the emergence of capitalism, and, coincidentally (or not so coincidentally) the violent Witch Hunts, women started to be excluded from society leading to a feminisation of poverty.

    The Witch Hunts demonised most interactions amongst women. Women were surveilled, marginalised and feared. Friendships amongst women became an object of suspicion, denounced, and understood as subversive. Women were portrayed as scolds, too domineering of their husbands, witches, and worse… Gossipers! And thus, the harmless stereotype of women as innate gossipers emerged.

    I use the word harmless sarcastically for many reasons. An obvious one is that a torture instrument was designed with the sole intention of punishing those women involved in gossiping.

    description of torture

    This instrument called the scold’s/witch’s/gossip bridle was an iron muzzle that locked onto the women’s head and mouth, pressing their tongue down to prevent them from speaking.

    Furthermore, the term gossip has been used to not only destroy traditional female practices, collective relations and systems of knowledge but also erode women’s rights and devalue women’s labour. Today, it continues to be used to reinforce the gender binary, infantilise certain actors, and construct certain conversations as worthless.

    Gossip is a tool used by women and other marginalised people to share information that other systems often won’t consider. Gossip keeps our communities together, it keeps us safe, it equips us with important knowledge. The personal is political. Our intimacies are political. To gossip is a subversive act, an anti-capitalist act, and a feminist act. Let’s reclaim this act, get together and gossip! After all, what do we have to lose? We are all witches in their eyes anyway.

    Gossip as a gendered term

    Origin of Gossip

    History of Gossip

    Evolution of Gossip






  • A post in that exact community was what determined the name of slop.

    Anyone is welcome to submit a mod application.

    For the first two years admins and sitemods made the decisions with occasional temp checks from the userbase.

    I added mods to the decision making process and due to what happened we are working a way for users to also be involved with the process.

    You are correct though that the people interested in creating, cultivating and moderating a community get the choice of what it is called. It has been that way the entire time the site has existed.

    That being said we are trying to open up this process for transparency as well as user engagement.